This was updated in r356703 to use llvm::sys::RetryAfterSignal, which
comes from llvm/Support/Errno.h. The header wasn't added, so it fails if
you compile for arm64/aarch64.
llvm-svn: 358530
Summary:
Saves some build times, and they're not part of the usual
developer workflow.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, friss
Subscribers: mgorny, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60780
llvm-svn: 358528
In an effort to help new LLDB developers, we added checks and messaging around
the selection of your codesigning identity on macOS. While helpful, it is not
actually correct. It's perfectly valid to codesign with an identity that is
not named lldb_codesign. Currently this fails the build.
This patch keeps a warning that informs developers how to setup lldb_codesign
and how to pass it to cmake, but it allows the build to proceed with a
different identity.
llvm-svn: 358525
D59433 and D60501 changed the way UUIDs are computed from minidump
files. This was done to synchronize the U(G)UID representation with the
native tools of given platforms, but it created a mismatch between
minidumps and breakpad files.
This updates the breakpad algorithm to match the one found in minidumps,
and also adds a couple of tests which should fail if these two ever get
out of sync. Incidentally, this means that the module id in the breakpad
files is almost identical to our notion of UUIDs, so the computation
algorithm can be somewhat simplified.
llvm-svn: 358500
Summary:
As reported in LLVM bug 41486, the check `(byte1 & 0xf8) == 0xc0` is wrong. We want to check for `11010nnn`,
so the proper value we want to compare against is `0xd0` (`0xc0` would check for the value `11000nnn` which we
already checked for above as described in the bug report).
Reviewers: #lldb, jasonmolenda
Reviewed By: #lldb, jasonmolenda
Subscribers: jasonmolenda, javed.absar, kristof.beyls, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60655
llvm-svn: 358479
Summary:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D51633 added error handling in the ASTImporter.cpp which uncovered an underlying bug in which we used the wrong name when handling naming conflicts. This could cause a segmentation fault when attempting to cast an int to an enum during expression parsing.
This test should pass once https://reviews.llvm.org/D59665 is committed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59667
llvm-svn: 358462
There is an alternative method to GetConstCStringWithLength that
takes a StringRef. GetConstCStringWithLength also calls this
method in the end, so directly calling the StringRef saves
us from a unnecessary conversion to a C-string.
llvm-svn: 358357
Do not use -nostdlib in target-symbols-add-unwind.test. NetBSD uses
startup files to provide obligatory ELF notes in executables,
and therefore using -nostdlib requires providing specially tailored
input. Otherwise, kernel rejects the result as invalid executable.
The replacement was suggested by Pavel Labath.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60648
llvm-svn: 358329
This test contained an incredibly complicated inferior, but in reality,
all it was testing was that we can backtrace up to main and see main's
arguments.
However, the way this was implemented (setting a breakpoint on a
separate thread) meant that each time the test would run, it would stop
in a different location on the main thread. Most of the time this
location would be deep in some libc function, which meant that the
success of this test depended on our ability to backtrace out of a
random function of the c library that the user happens to have
installed.
This makes the test unpredictable. Backtracing out of a libc function is
an important functionality, but this is not the way to test it. Often it
is not even our fault that we cannot backtrace out because the C library
contains a lot of assembly routines that may not have correct unwind
info associated with them.
For this reason the test has accumulated numerous @expectedFail/Flaky
decorators. In this patch, I replace the inferior with one that does not
depend on libc functions. Instead I create a couple of stack frames of
user code, and have the test verify that. I also simplify the test by
using lldbutil.run_to_source_breakpoint.
llvm-svn: 358266
Summary:
This patch attempts to solve two issues made this code hard to follow
for me.
The first issue was that a lot of what these visitors do is mutate the
AST. The visitor pattern is not particularly good for that because by
the time you have performed the dynamic type dispatch, it's too late to
go back to the parent node, and change its pointer. The previous code
dealt with that relatively elegantly, but it still meant that one had to
perform manual type checks, which is what the visitor pattern is
supposed to avoid.
The second issue was not being able to return values from the Visit
functions, which meant that one had to store function results in member
variables (a common problem with visitor patterns).
Here, I solve both problems by making the visitor use a type switch
instead of going through double dispatch on the visited object. This
allows one to parameterize the visitor based on the return type and pass
function results as function results. The mutation is fascilitated by
having each Visit function take two arguments -- a reference to the
object itself (with the correct dynamic type), and a reference to the
parent's pointer to this object.
Although this wasn't my explicit goal here, the fact that we're not
using virtual dispatch anymore allows us to make the AST nodes
trivially destructible, which is a good thing, since we were not
destroying them anyway.
Reviewers: aleksandr.urakov, amccarth
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60410
llvm-svn: 358261
Somehow the path gets messed up. The command looks correct, but the
python path is not.
(lldb) mywrite
E:\build_slave\lldb-x64-windows-ninja\build\tools\lldb\lit\Commands\
CommandScriptImmediateOutput\Output\
CommandScriptImmediateOutputFile.test.tmp.read.txt r
No such file or directory:
'E:build_slavelldb-x64-windows-ninjabuildtoolslldblitCommands
CommandScriptImmediateOutputOutput
CommandScriptImmediateOutputFile.test.tmp.read.txt'
Maybe the shlex module is escaping it?
llvm-svn: 358213
This converts the CommandScriptImmediateOutput test from a python test
using pexpect to a lit test.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60566
llvm-svn: 358180
Fix mistake that mapped mm* registers into the space for xmm* registers,
rather than the one shared with st* registers. In other words,
'register read mmN' now correctly shows the mmN register rather than
part of xmmN.
Includes a minimal lit regression test.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60325
llvm-svn: 358178
Summary:
D59433 added code to swap bytes UUIDs coming from minidump files, but
only enabled it for apple platforms. Based on my research, I believe
this is the correct thing to do for windows as well, as the natural way
of printing U(G)UIDs on this platforms is to print the first three
components as (4 or 2)-byte integers printed in natural (big-endian)
order. This makes the UUID string coming out of lldb match the strings
produced by other windows tools.
The decision to byte-swap the age field is somewhat arbitrary, because
the age field is usually printed separately from the file GUID (and
often in decimal). However, for our purposes (telling whether two files
are identical), including it in the UUID is correct, and printing it in
big-endian makes it easier to recognize the age value.
This also makes the UUIDs generated here (almost) match up with the
UUIDs computed for breakpad symbol files
(BreakpadRecords.cpp:parseModuleId), which already implemented the
byte-swapping. The "almost" is here because ObjectFileBreakpad does not
swap the age field, but I'll fix that in a follow-up.
There is no UUID support in ObjectFileCOFF at the moment, but ideally
the algorithms used here and in ObjectFileCOFF should be in sync so that
object file matching works correctly.
Reviewers: clayborg, amccarth, markmentovai, asmith
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60501
llvm-svn: 358169
A lot of comments in LLDB are surrounded by an ASCII line to delimit the
begging and end of the comment.
Its use is not really consistent across the code base, sometimes the
lines are longer, sometimes they are shorter and sometimes they are
omitted. Furthermore, it looks kind of weird with the 80 column limit,
where the comment actually extends past the line, but not by much.
Furthermore, when /// is used for Doxygen comments, it looks
particularly odd. And when // is used, it incorrectly gives the
impression that it's actually a Doxygen comment.
I assume these lines were added to improve distinguishing between
comments and code. However, given that todays editors and IDEs do a
great job at highlighting comments, I think it's worth to drop this for
the sake of consistency. The alternative is fixing all the
inconsistencies, which would create a lot more churn.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60508
llvm-svn: 358135
TestObjCMethods2.py was the third-longest running test on Darwin. By
splitting it up, lit can exploit parallelism to reduce the total wall
clock time.
llvm-svn: 358088
In this patch, I just remove the structure definitions for the
ModuleList stream and the associated parsing code. The rest of the code
is converted to work with the definitions in llvm. NFC.
llvm-svn: 358070
Summary:
Some of these were present in files which should never be read by swig
(and we also had one in the interface file, which is only read by swig).
They are probably leftovers from the time when we were running swig over
lldb headers directly.
While writing this patch, I noticed that some of the #ifdefs were
guarding public functions that were operating on lldb_private data
types. While it wasn't strictly necessary for this patch, I made these
private, as nobody should really be accessing them. This can potentially
break existing code if it happened to use these methods, though it will
only break at build time -- if someone builds against an old header, he
should still be able to link to a new lldb library, since the functions
are still there.
We could keep these public for backward compatbility, but I would argue
that if anyone was actually using these functions for anything, his code
is already broken.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, clayborg, jingham
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60400
llvm-svn: 357984
This fixes the following doxygen warning when building the lldb-cpp-doc
target.
This commit fixes:
SBStructuredData.h:94 warning: Found unknown command `\dst'
SBStructuredData.h:97 warning: Found unknown command `\dst'
SBStructuredData.h:98 warning: Found unknown command `\dst'
SBStructuredData.h:100 warning: Found unknown command `\dst'
SBStructuredData.h:104 warning: Found unknown command `\dst'
Patch by: Konrad Kleine
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60443
llvm-svn: 357983
There was a space missing in some the documentation for
lldb::BreakpointsWriteToFile.
This fixes the following doxygen error when building the lldb-cpp-doc
target:
llvm-project/lldb/include/lldb/API/SBTarget.h:775 warning: Found
unknown command `\btrue'
Patch by: Konrad Kleine
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60442
llvm-svn: 357980
Summary:
This patch adds support for parsing STACK CFI records from breakpad
files. The expressions specifying the values of registers are not
parsed.The idea is that these will be handed off to the postfix
expression -> dwarf compiler, once it is extracted from the internals of
the NativePDB plugin.
Reviewers: clayborg, amccarth, markmentovai
Subscribers: aprantl, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60268
llvm-svn: 357975
I have occasional crashes coming from SBThread::GetExtendedBacktraceThread. The
symptom is that we got true back from HasThreadScope - so we should have a valid
live thread, but then when we go to use the thread, it is not good anymore and we
crash.
I can't spot any obvious cause for this crash, but in looking for same I noticed
that in the current code we check that the thread is valid, THEN we take the stop
locker. We really should do that in the other order, and ensure that the process
will stay stopped before we check our thread is still good. That's what this patch does.
<rdar://problem/47478205>
llvm-svn: 357963
Add a flag to control whether the ModulesDidLoad notification is
called when a module is added. If the notifications are disabled,
the caller must call ModulesDidLoad after adding all the new modules,
but postponing this notification until they're all batched up can
allow for better efficiency than notifying one-by-one.
Change the name of the ModuleList notifier functions that a subclass
can implement to start with 'Notify' to make it clear what they are.
Add a NotifyModulesRemoved.
Add header documentation for the changed/updated methods.
Added defaulted-value 'notify' argument to ModuleList Append,
AppendIfNeeded, and Remove because callers working with a local
ModuleList don't have an obvious idea of what notify means in this
context. When the ModuleList is a part of the Target class, the
notify behavior matters.
DynamicLoaderDarwin has been updated so that libraries being
added/removed are correctly batched up before notifications are
sent. Added the TestModuleLoadedNotifys.py test to run on
Darwin to test this.
<rdar://problem/48293064>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60172
llvm-svn: 357955
This is a follow-up to r357829 (https://reviews.llvm.org/D60340) to
see whether increasing the packet timeout for non-asan builds could
also positively affect the stability of non-asan bots.
llvm-svn: 357954
llvm::StringRef host_and_port is not guaranteed to be null-terminated.
Generally, it is not safe at all to convert a StringRef into a char *
by calling data() on it.
<rdar://problem/49698580>
llvm-svn: 357948
I also update the tests for SystemInfo parsing to use the yaml2minidump
capabilities in llvm instead of relying on checked-in binaries.
llvm-svn: 357896
There are no patterns like that in the generated swig files (there
probably were some back in the days when we were running swig over the
header files directly), so this is dead code and has no effect on the
generated file.
llvm-svn: 357890
Since these timeouts guard against catastrophic error in debugserver,
I also increased all of them to the maximum value among them.
The motivation for this test was the observation that an asanified
LLDB would often exhibit seemingly random test failures that could be
traced back to debugserver packets getting out of sync. With this path
applied I can no longer reproduce the one particular failure mode that
I was investigating.
rdar://problem/49441261
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60340
llvm-svn: 357829
Summary:
This line is unnecessary because add_llvm_executable will handle
linking the correct LLVM libraries for you. LLDB standalone builds are totally
fine without this.
In the best case, having this line here is harmless. In the worst case it can
cause link issues.
If you build lldb-server for android using the standalone build, this line
will cause LLVM_LIBRARY_DIR to be the first place you look for libraries.
This is an issue because if you built libc++, it will try to link against
that one instead of the one from the android NDK. Meanwhile, the LLVM libraries
you're linking against were linked against the libc++ from the NDK.
Ideally, we would take advantage of the AFTER option for link_directories(), but
that was not available in LLDB's minimum supported version of CMake (CMake 3.4.3).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60180
llvm-svn: 357817
The .noindex suffix is used on macOS to prevent Spotlight from indexing
its contents. These folders contain test output from dotest.py and
should be ignored when dotest is run from the LLDB source directory.
llvm-svn: 357787
The testcase for objective-c data formatters is very big as it checks a
bunch of stuff. This is annoying when using the lit test driver, because
it prevents us from running the different cases in parallel. As a
result, it's always one of the last few tests that complete. This patch
splits the test into multiple files that share a common base class. This
way lit can run the different tests in parallel.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60300
llvm-svn: 357786
This is the last functional change to the generated python module being
done by modify-python-lldb.py. The remaining code just deals with
reformatting of comments.
llvm-svn: 357755
This patch removes the lower layers of the minidump parsing code from
the MinidumpParser class, and replaces it with the minidump parser in
llvm.
Not all functionality is already avaiable in the llvm class, but it is
enough for us to be able to stop enumerating streams manually, and rely
on the minidump directory parsing code from the llvm class.
This also removes some checked-in binaries which were used to test error
handling in the parser, as the error handling is now done (and tested)
in llvm. Instead I just add one test that ensures we correctly propagate
the errors reported by the llvm parser. The input for this test can be
written in yaml instead of a checked-in binary.
llvm-svn: 357748
When this test fails (flakes) all we get is an error message like "False
is not True". This replaces patterns like assertTrue(a == b) with
assertEqual(a, b), so we get a better error message (and hopefully a
hint as to why the test is flaky).
llvm-svn: 357747
Summary:
The code was passing pointers around, expecting they would be not null.
In c++ it is possible to convey this notion explicitly by using a
reference instead.
Not all uses of pointers could be converted to references (e.g. one
can't store references in a container), but this will at least make it
locally obvious that code is dealing with nonnull pointers.
Reviewers: aleksandr.urakov, amccarth
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60271
llvm-svn: 357744
Previously we would classify all STACK records into a single bucket.
This is not really helpful, because there are three distinct types of
records beginning with the token "STACK" (STACK CFI INIT, STACK CFI,
STACK WIN). To be consistent with how we're treating other records, we
should classify these as three different record types.
It also implements the logic to put "STACK CFI INIT" and "STACK CFI"
records into the same "section" of the breakpad file, as they are meant
to be read together (similar to how FUNC and LINE records are treated).
The code which performs actual parsing of these records will come in a
separate patch.
llvm-svn: 357691
Summary:
This patch moves the modify-python-lldb code for adding new functions to
the SBModule class into the SBModule interface file. As this is the last
class using this functionality, I also remove all support for this kind
of modifications from modify-python-lldb.py.
Reviewers: amccarth, clayborg, jingham
Subscribers: zturner, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60195
llvm-svn: 357680
Summary:
Now CVType and CVSymbol are effectively type-safe wrappers around
ArrayRef<uint8_t>. Make the kind() accessor load it from the
RecordPrefix, which is the same for types and symbols.
Reviewers: zturner, aganea
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60018
llvm-svn: 357658
For some reason I had convinced myself that functions returning by
pointer or reference do not require recording their result. However,
after further considering I don't see how that could work, at least not
with the current implementation. Interestingly enough, the reproducer
instrumentation already (mostly) accounts for this, though the
lldb-instr tool did not.
This patch adds the missing macros and updates the lldb-instr tool.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60178
llvm-svn: 357639
Summary:
After https://reviews.llvm.org/D59828 and https://reviews.llvm.org/D59849,
I believe the problems with these tests hanging have been solved.
I tried enabling all of them on my machine, and got two failures:
- One of them was spawning a child process that lives for 5 seconds, waited
for 5 seconds to attach to the child, and failed because the child wasn't
there.
- The other one was a legit failure because shell expansion of arguments doesn't
work on Linux.
This tests enables all lldb-vscode tests on Linux except for "launch process
with shell expansion of args" (which doesn't work), and fixes the other broken
test by reducing the time it waits before attaching to its child process.
Reviewers: zturner, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60153
llvm-svn: 357633
Spotted some problems in the Driver's PrepareCommandsForSourcing while
helping a colleague track another problem.
1. One error case was not handled because there was no else clause.
Fixed by switching to llvm's early-out style instead of nested
`if (succes) { } else { }` cases. This keeps error handling close
to the actual error.
2. One call-site failed to call the clean-up function. I solved this
by simplifying the API. PrepareCommandsForSourcing no longer requires
the caller to provide a buffer for the pipe's file descriptors and to
call a separate clean-up function later. PrepareCommandsForSourcing
now ensures the file descriptors are handled before returning.
(The read end of the pipe is held open by the returned FILE * as
before.)
I also eliminated an unnecessary local, shorted the lifetime of another,
and tried to improve the comments.
I wrapped the call to open the pipe to get the `#ifdef`s out of the
mainline. I replaced the `close`/`_close` calls with a platform-neutral
helper from `llvm::sys` for the same reason. Per discussion on the
review, I'm leaving the `fdopen` call to use the spelling that Windows
has officially deprecated because it still works it avoids more `#ifdef`s.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60152
llvm-svn: 357626
Allow partial UUID matching in Minidump core file plug-in
Breakpad had bugs in earlier versions where it would take a 20 byte ELF build ID and put it into the minidump file as a 16 byte PDB70 UUID with an age of zero. This would make it impossible to do postmortem debugging with one of these older minidump files.
This fix allows partial matching of UUIDs. To do this we first try and match with the full UUID value, and then fall back to removing the original directory path from the module specification and we remove the UUID requirement, and then manually do the matching ourselves. This allows scripts to find symbols files using a symbol server, place them all in a directory, use the "setting set target.exec-search-paths" setting to specify the directory, and then load the core file. The Target::GetSharedModule() can then find the correct file without doing any other matching and load it.
Tests were added to cover a partial UUID match where the breakpad file has a 16 byte UUID and the actual file on disk has a 20 byte UUID, both where the first 16 bytes match, and don't match.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60001
llvm-svn: 357603
Summary:
Instead of modifying the swig-generated code, just add the appropriate
methods to the interface files in order to get the swig to do the
generation for us.
This is a straight-forward move from the python script to the interface
files. The single class which has nontrivial handling in the script
(SBModule) has been left for a separate patch.
For the cases where I did not find any tests exercising the
iteration/length methods (i.e., no tests failed after I stopped emitting
them), I tried to add basic tests for that functionality.
Reviewers: zturner, jingham, amccarth
Subscribers: jdoerfert, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60119
llvm-svn: 357572
Lit has the ability to set a timeout for individual tests. This patch
enables that functionality with a default of 10 minutes.
Currently we rely on the bots to kill the whole test suite. However this
doesn't tell us which test caused the timeout. Furthermore, when running
the test suite during development, I have to manually kill the tests
that time out to get the lit output at then end. This fixes both
inconveniences.
llvm-svn: 357555
In order to debug a failing python test, you need to debug Python
instead of the wrapper. For a while I've been adding and removing this,
but I think it could be useful for everyone.
llvm-svn: 357554
See discussion in https://reviews.llvm.org/D60001.
Revert Clean up windows build bot.
This reverts r357504 (git commit 380c2420ec)
Revert Fix buildbot where paths were not matching up.
This reverts r357491 (git commit 5050586860)
Revert Allow partial UUID matching in Minidump core file plug-in
This reverts r357482 (git commit 838bba9c34)
llvm-svn: 357534
A recent patch to LLD started emitting information about import modules.
These are represented as compile units in the PDB, but with no
additional debug info. This was confusing the native pdb reader, who
expected that the debug info stream be present.
This should fix failing tests on the Windows bots.
llvm-svn: 357513
Breakpad had bugs in earlier versions where it would take a 20 byte ELF build ID and put it into the minidump file as a 16 byte PDB70 UUID with an age of zero. This would make it impossible to do postmortem debugging with one of these older minidump files.
This fix allows partial matching of UUIDs. To do this we first try and match with the full UUID value, and then fall back to removing the original directory path from the module specification and we remove the UUID requirement, and then manually do the matching ourselves. This allows scripts to find symbols files using a symbol server, place them all in a directory, use the "setting set target.exec-search-paths" setting to specify the directory, and then load the core file. The Target::GetSharedModule() can then find the correct file without doing any other matching and load it.
Tests were added to cover a partial UUID match where the breakpad file has a 16 byte UUID and the actual file on disk has a 20 byte UUID, both where the first 16 bytes match, and don't match.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60001
llvm-svn: 357482
Summary:
modify-python-lldb.py had code to insert python equality operators to
some classes. Some of those classes already had c++ equality operators,
and some didn't.
This makes the situation more consistent, by removing all equality
handilng from modify-python-lldb. Instead, I add c++ operators to
classes where they were missing, and expose them in the swig interface
files so that they are available to python too.
The only tricky case was the SBAddress class, which had an operator==
defined as a free function, which is not handled by swig. This function
cannot be removed without breaking ABI, and we cannot add an extra
operator== member, as that would make equality comparisons ambiguous.
For this class, I define a python __eq__ function by hand and have it
delegate to the operator!=, which I have defined as a member function.
This isn't fully NFC, as the semantics of some equality functions in
python changes slightly, but I believe it changes for the better (e.g.,
previously SBBreakpoint.__eq__ would consider two breakpoints with the
same ID as equal, even if they belonged to different targets; now they
are only equal if they belong to the same target).
Reviewers: jingham, clayborg, zturner
Subscribers: jdoerfert, JDevlieghere, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59819
llvm-svn: 357463
I'm not sure why this surfaced at this particular point, but
TestCommandScriptImmediateOutput (a pexpect test) had a synchronization
issue, where the (lldb) promts it was expecting were getting out of
sync. This happened for two reasons:
- it did not expect the initial (lldb) prompt we print at startup
- launchArgs() returned None, which resulted in an extra "target create
None" command being issued to lldb (and an extra unhandled prompt
being printed).
Resolving these two issues seems to fix (or at least, improve) the test.
llvm-svn: 357459
The test was hitting llvm_unreachable in
Platform::GetSoftwareBreakpointTrapOpcode because it could not figure
out the architecture of the process. Since that is not the purpose of
the test, I change the test to use an explicit
CreateTargetWithFileAndTargetTriple command to specify it.
llvm-svn: 357456
Summary:
This refactors moves the register name->number resolution out of the
FPOProgramNodeRegisterRef class. Instead I create a special
FPOProgramNodeSymbol class, which holds unresolved symbols, and move the
resolution into the ResolveRegisterRefs visitor.
The background here is that I'd like to use this code for Breakpad
unwind info, which uses similar syntax to describe unwind info. For
example, a simple breakpad unwind program might look like:
.cfa: $esp 8 + $ebp: .cfa 8 - ^
To be able to do this, I need to be able to customize register
resolving, as that is presently hardcoded to use codeview register
names, but breakpad supports a lot more architectures with different
register names. Moving the resolution into a separate class will allow
each user to use a different resolution logic.
Reviewers: aleksandr.urakov, zturner, amccarth
Subscribers: jdoerfert, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60068
llvm-svn: 357455
While reviewing D56233 it became clear to me that this test can be
simplified. There's no need for a start-stop cycle in the inferior -- we
can start fiddling with its registers as soon as it is launched.
llvm-svn: 357451
I found the code of Process::WriteMemory particularly hard to follow
when reviewing Ismail's change in D60022. This simplifies the code and
hopefully prevents similar oversights in the future.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60092
llvm-svn: 357428
Summary:
This change prevents the lldb-vscode test harness from hanging up waiting for
new messages when the lldb-vscode subprocess crashes.
Now, when an EOF from the subprocess pipe is detected we enqueue a `None` packet
in the received packets list. Then, during the message processing loop, we can
use this `None` packet to tell apart the case where lldb-vscode has terminated
unexpectedly from the normal situation where no pending messages means blocking
and waiting for more data.
I believe this should be enough to fix the issues with these tests hanging on
multiple platforms. Once this lands, I'll prepare and test a separate change
removing the @skipIfLinux annotations.
Reviewers: clayborg, zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59849
llvm-svn: 357426
Summary:
In case of a breakpoint site overlapping with the destination address,
the WriteMemory method reported an incorrect memory size.
Instead of returning the right amount of bytes written, it falls through
the scope and returned 0.
Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
Reviewers: jasonmolenda, friss, jingham
Subscribers: JDevlieghere, davide, lldb-commits, #lldb
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60022
llvm-svn: 357420
Include support for NetBSD core dumps from evbarm/aarch64 system,
and matching test cases for them.
Based on earlier work by Kamil Rytarowski.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60034
llvm-svn: 357399
Summary:
We're using ptrace(PTRACE_SETREGSET, NT_X86_XSTATE) to write all non-gpt
registers on x86 linux. Unfortunately, this method has a quirk, where
the kernel rejects all attempts to write to this area if one supplies a
buffer which is smaller than the area size (even though the kernel will
happily accept partial reads from it).
This means that if the CPU supports some new registers/extensions that
we don't know about (in my case it was the PKRU extension), we will fail
to write *any* non-gpr registers, even those that we know about.
Since this is a situation that's likely to appear again and again, I add
code to NativeRegisterContextLinux_x86_64 to detect the runtime size of
the area, and allocate an appropriate buffer. This does not mean that we
will start automatically supporting all new extensions, but it does mean
that the new extensions will not prevent the old ones from working.
This fixes tests attempting to write to non-gpr registers on new intel
processors (cca Kaby Lake Refresh).
Reviewers: jankratochvil, davezarzycki
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59991
llvm-svn: 357376
This patch limits the scope of the python header to the implementation
of the python script interpreter plugin. ScriptInterpreterPython is now
an abstract interface that doesn't expose any Python specific types, and
is implemented by the ScriptInterpreterPythonImpl.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59976
llvm-svn: 357307
The utility library shouldn't depend on curses, libedit or python. Move
curses to core, libedit to host and python to the python plugin.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59970
llvm-svn: 357287
FindPythonInterp and FindPythonLibs do two things, they set some
variables (PYTHON_LIBRARIES, PYTHON_INCLUDE_DIRS) and update the cached
variables (PYTHON_LIBRARY, PYTHON_INCLUDE_DIR) which are also used to
specify a custom python installation.
I believe the canonical way to do this is to use the PYTHON_LIBRARIES
and PYTHON_INCLUDE_DIRS variables instead of the cached ones. However,
since the cached variables are accessible from the cache and GUI, this
is a lot less confusing when you're trying to debug why a variable did
or didn't get the value you expected. Furthermore, as far as I can tell,
the implementation uses the cached variables to set their LIBRARIES/DIRS
counterparts. This is also the reason this works today even though we
mix-and-match.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59968
llvm-svn: 357282
Todd added this empty readline module to workaround an issue with an old
version of Python on Ubuntu in 2014 (18841). In the meantime, libedit
seems to have fixed the underlying issue, and indeed, I wasn't able to
reproduce this.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59972
llvm-svn: 357277
For = operators for lists that have mutexes, we were either
just taking the locks sequentially or hand-rolling a trick
to try to avoid lock inversion. Use the std::lock mechanism
for this instead.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59957
llvm-svn: 357276
It was making a list of a certain size but not always filling in that
many elements, which would lead to a crash iterating over the list.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59913
llvm-svn: 357207
For a single char argument, find_first_of is equal to find and
find_last_of is equal to rfind. While playing around with the plugin
stuff this caused an export failure because it always got inlined except
once, which resulted in an undefined symbol.
llvm-svn: 357198
the collection lock before we iterate over the owners calling ShouldStop.
BreakpointSite::ShouldStop can do a lot of work, and might by chance hit the same breakpoint
site again on another thread. So instead of holding the site's owners lock
while iterating over them calling ShouldStop, I make a local copy of the list, drop the lock
and then iterate over the copy calling BreakpointLocation::ShouldStop.
It's actually quite difficult to make this cause problems because usually all the
action happens on the private state thread, and the lock is recursive.
I have a report where some code hit the ASAN error breakpoint, went to
compile the ASAN error gathering expression, in the course of compiling
that we went to fetch the ObjC runtime data, but the state of the program
was such that the ObjC runtime grubbing function triggered an ASAN error and
we were executing that function on another thread.
I couldn't figure out a way to reproduce that situation in a test. But this is an
NFC change anyway, it just makes the locking strategy more narrowly focused.
<rdar://problem/49074093>
llvm-svn: 357141
Currently, only ClangASTContext knows about PDBASTParser. Eventually
we want the TypeSystem to have getters/setters for the base parser
and then have the TypeSystem subclasses know about the proper
PDBASTParser subclasses. This is similar to how DWARFASTParsers work.
llvm-svn: 357131
Summary:
An TranslationUnitDecl was being brought in from the clang::ASTContext
which required clang specific code to exist in SymbolFilePDB.
Since it was unused we can just get rid of it along with the clang
specific code.
Reviewers: rnk, zturner, compnerd
Reviewed By: compnerd
Subscribers: jdoerfert
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59804
llvm-svn: 357113
This re-commits r354263, which was because it uncovered with handling of
modules with empty (zero) UUIDs. This would cause us to treat two
modules as intentical even though they were not. This caused an assert
in PlaceholderObjectFile::SetLoadAddress to fire, because we were trying
to load the module twice even though it was designed to be only loaded
at a specific address. (The same problem also existed with the previous
implementation, but it had no asserts to warn us about this.) These
issues have now been fixed in r356896.
windows bot. The issue there was that ObjectFilePECOFF vended its base
address through the incorrect interface. SymbolFilePDB depended on that,
which lead to assertion failures when SymbolFilePDB was attempting to
use the placeholder object files as a base. This has been fixed in
r354258
The original commit message was:
The reason this wasn't working was that ProcessMinidump was creating odd
object-file-less modules, and SymbolFileBreakpad required the module to
have an associated object file because it needed to get its base
address.
This fixes that by introducing a PlaceholderObjectFile to serve as a
dummy object file. The general idea for this is taken from D55142, but
I've reworked it a bit to avoid the need for the PlaceholderModule
class. Now that we have an object file, our modules are sufficiently
similar to regular modules that we can use the regular Module class
almost out of the box -- the only thing I needed to tweak was the
Module::CreateModuleFromObjectFile functon to set the module's FileSpec
in addition to it's architecture. This wasn't needed for ObjectFileJIT
(the other user of CreateModuleFromObjectFile), but it shouldn't hurt it
either, and the change seems like a straightforward extension of this
function.
Reviewers: clayborg, lemo, amccarth
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57751
llvm-svn: 357060
This is diagnosed by gcc-8. The ValueType struct already has a default
constructor which performs zero-initialization, so we can just call that
instead of using memset.
llvm-svn: 357056
Summary:
gcc diagnoses this as "array subscript 63 is above array bounds of
'RegisterContextDarwin_arm64::VReg [32]'".
The correct fix seems to be subtracting the fpu register base index, but
I have no way of verifying that this actually works.
Reviewers: jasonmolenda
Subscribers: javed.absar, kristof.beyls, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59495
llvm-svn: 357055
Summary:
Instead of assuming that the language is C++ instead check the compunit
for the language it received from the debug info.
Subscribers: aprantl, jdoerfert
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59805
llvm-svn: 357044
Remove CompilerInstance::VirtualFileSystem and
CompilerInstance::setVirtualFileSystem, instead relying on the VFS in
the FileManager. CompilerInstance and its clients already went to some
trouble to make these match. Now they are guaranteed to match.
As part of this, I added a VFS parameter (defaults to nullptr) to
CompilerInstance::createFileManager, to avoid repeating construction
logic in clients that just wanted to customize the VFS.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D59377
llvm-svn: 357037
Summary:
In the current state, 'ninja check-lldb' runs the lldb-vscode tests, but it
won't rebuild lldb-vscode if any of its sources has changed. This is very
confusing when you fix something and the tests keep failing, or vice versa.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: mgorny, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59828
llvm-svn: 357016
Summary:
After D59297, the TypePair class kind of lost its purpose as it was no
longer a "pair". This finishes the job started in that patch and deletes
the class altogether. All usages have been updated to use CompilerType
class directly.
Reviewers: clayborg, jingham, zturner
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, dexonsmith, jdoerfert, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59414
llvm-svn: 356993
This is the next step in moving the minidump parsing into llvm. I remove
the minidump structures already defined in the llvm Object library and
convert our parser to use those. NFC.
llvm-svn: 356992
The python plugin uses wrappers generated by swig. For the symbols to be
available, we'd need to link against liblldb, which is not an option
because the symbols could conflict with the static library we are
testing. Instead we define the symbols ourselves in the unit test.
llvm-svn: 356971
With the initialization taking place inside the Python script
interpreter, these function no longer need to be public. The exception
is the g_swig_init_callback which is used from the RAII object.
llvm-svn: 356944
Currently LLDB crashes when autocompleting a command that ends with a
backtick because the quote character wasn't handled. This fixes that and
adds a unit test for this function.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59779
llvm-svn: 356927
At the moment when --repl is passed to lldb it silently ignores any
commands passed via the options below:
--one-line-before-file <command>
Tells the debugger to execute this one-line lldb command before any file provided on the command line has been loaded.
--one-line <command>
Tells the debugger to execute this one-line lldb command after any file provided on the command line has been loaded.
--source-before-file <file>
Tells the debugger to read in and execute the lldb commands in the given file, before any file has been loaded.
--source <file>
Tells the debugger to read in and execute the lldb commands in the given file, after any file has been loaded.
-O <value> Alias for --one-line-before-file
-o <value> Alias for --one-line
-S <value> Alias for --source-before-file
-s <value> Alias for --source
The -O and -S options are quite useful when writing tests for the REPL
though, e.g. to change settings prior to entering REPL mode. This
patch updates the driver to still respect the commands supplied via -O
and -S when passing --repl instead of silently ignoring them. As -s
and -o don't really make sense in REPL mode, commands supplied via
those options are still ignored, but the driver now emits a warning to
make that clear to the user.
Patch by Nathan Hawes!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59681
llvm-svn: 356911
This patch begins the process of migrating the "minidump" plugin to the
minidump parser in llvm. The llvm parser is not fully finished yet, but
even now, a lot of things can be switched over. The gradual migration
process will allow us to easier detect if things break than doing a big
one-step migration. Doing it early will allow us to make sure that the
llvm parser fits the use case that we need in lldb.
In this patch I start with the various minidump constants, which have
their llvm equivalent. It doesn't contain any functional changes. The
diff just reflects the different naming of things in llvm.
llvm-svn: 356898
The changes were reverted due to ubsan errors (unaligned accesses). Here
I fix those errors by first copying the data into aligned storage.
Besides fixing alignment issues, this also fixes reading of minidump
strings on big-endian systems.
llvm-svn: 356896
This fixes the flakiness of the GDB remote reproducer during replay. It
was caused by a combination sending one ACK to many from the replay
server and the code that "flushes" any queued GDB remote packets in
GDBRemoteCommunicationClient::HandshakeWithServer.
The spurious ACK was the result of combining both implicit and explicit
handling of ACKs in the replay server. The handshake consists of an ACK
followed by an QStartNoAckMode. As long as we haven't seen any
QStartNoAckMode, we were sending implicit acknowledgments. So the first
ACK got acknowledged twice, once implicitly, and once as part of the
replay.
The reason we didn't notice this was the code in HandshakeWithServer
that "waits for any responses that might have been queued up in the
remote GDB server and flush them all". A 10ms timeout is used to move on
when no packets are left. If the second ACK didn't make it within those
10ms, all packets were offset by one.
llvm-svn: 356825
Summary:
For the only version of Python actually supported on Darwin.
<rdar://problem/40961425>
Reviewers: jingham, friss, JDevlieghere, aprantl, jasonmolenda
Subscribers: jdoerfert, llvm-commits, lldb-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59719
llvm-svn: 356816
This reverts the following two commits:
Revert "Extend r356573 (minidump UUID handling) to cover elf build-ids too"
Revert "Fix UUID decoding from minidump files"
Greg's original commit broke the sanitizer bot which has been red for
several days now.
http://green.lab.llvm.org/green/view/LLDB/job/lldb-sanitized/
llvm-svn: 356806
This reverts commit r356682 because it breaks the DWO flavours of some
tests:
lldb-Suite :: lang/c/const_variables/TestConstVariables.py
lldb-Suite :: lang/c/local_variables/TestLocalVariables.py
lldb-Suite :: lang/c/vla/TestVLA.py
llvm-svn: 356773
Breakpad (but not crashpad) will insert an empty (all-zero) build-id
record for modules which do not have a build-id. This tells lldb to
treat such records as empty/invalid uuids.
llvm-svn: 356751
This is mostly mechanical, and just moves the remaining non-DWO
related sections over to DWARFContext.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59611
llvm-svn: 356682
When the output of map is not used, using a list comprehension or an explicit
call to list looks awkward.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59587
llvm-svn: 356672
On Linux, a QEnvironment packet is sent for every environment variable.
This breaks replay when the number of environment variables is different
then during capture. The solution is to always reply with OK.
llvm-svn: 356643
Make debugging of the GDB remote packet aspect of reproducers easier by
logging both requests and replies. This enables some sanity checking
during replay.
llvm-svn: 356638
LLVM's DWARF parsing library has a class called DWARFContext which holds
all of the various DWARF data sections and lots of other information.
LLDB's on the other hand stores all of this directly in SymbolFileDWARF
/ SymbolFileDWARFDwo and passes this interface around through the
parsing library. Obviously this is incompatible with a world where the
low level interface does not depend on the high level interface, so we
need to move towards a model similar to LLVM's - i.e. all of the context
needed for low level parsing should be in a single class, and that class
gets passed around.
This patch is a small incremental step towards achieving this. The
interface and internals deviate from LLVM's for technical reasons, but
the high level idea is the same. The goal is, eventually, to remove all
occurrences of SymbolFileDWARF from the low level parsing code.
For now I've chosen a very simple section - the .debug_aranges section
to move into DWARFContext while leaving everything else unchanged. In
the short term this is a bit confusing because now the information you
need might come from either of 2 different locations. But it's a huge
refactor to do this all at once and runs a much higher risk of breaking
things. So I think it would be wise to do this in very small pieces.
TL;DR - No functional change
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59562
llvm-svn: 356612
Summary:
`ASTImporter::Imported` currently returns a Decl, but that return value is not used by the ASTImporter (or anywhere else)
nor is it documented.
Reviewers: balazske, martong, a.sidorin, shafik
Reviewed By: balazske, martong
Subscribers: rnkovacs, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59595
llvm-svn: 356592
This patch fixes:
UUIDs now don't include the age field from a PDB70 when the age is zero. Prior to this they would incorrectly contain the zero age which stopped us from being able to match up the UUID with real files.
UUIDs for Apple targets get the first 32 bit value and next two 16 bit values swapped. Breakpad incorrectly swaps these values when it creates darwin minidump files, so this must be undone so we can match up symbol files with the minidump modules.
UUIDs that are all zeroes are treated as invalid UUIDs. Breakpad will always save out a UUID, even if one wasn't available. This caused all files that have UUID values of zero to be uniqued to the first module that had a zero UUID. We now don't fill in the UUID if it is all zeroes.
Added tests for PDB70 and ELF build ID based CvRecords.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59433
llvm-svn: 356573
All of this is code that is unreferenced. Removing as much of
this as possible makes it more easy to determine what functionality
is missing and/or shared between LLVM and LLDB's DWARF interfaces.
llvm-svn: 356509
Most of these are Dump functions that are never called, but there
is one instance of entire unused classes (DWARFDebugMacinfo and
DWARFDebugMacinfoEntry) which are also unreferenced in the codebase).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59276
llvm-svn: 356490
Move SBRegistry method registrations from SBReproducer.cpp into files
declaring the individual APIs, in order to reduce the memory consumption
during build and improve maintainability. The current humongous
SBRegistry constructor exhausts all memory on a NetBSD system with 4G
RAM + 4G swap, therefore making it impossible to build LLDB.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59427
llvm-svn: 356481
These log statements have questionable value, and hinder the effort
of separating the high and low level DWARF parsing interfaces inside
of LLDB. Removing them for now, and if/when we need such log statements
again in the future, we can add them back (if possible) or introduce a
mechanism for logging from the low-level interface in such a way that it
isn't coupled to the high level interface.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59498
llvm-svn: 356469
This is a new warning which started appearing as of gcc-8. The Opcode
class has a non-trivial constructor, so the idea of the warning is that
code should use that to initialize the object instead of using memset
(which can perturb class invariants set up by the constructor). In this
case, the Opcode default constructor was already clearing the object's
fields so we can just drop the memset call.
While I'm touching the EmulateInstruction constructor, I also move the
initialization of other members into the class declaration.
llvm-svn: 356459
Summary:
This is a preparatory step to enable adding of unwind plans by symbol
file plugins.
Although at the surface it seems that currently symbol files have
nothing to do with unwinding, this isn't entirely correct even now. The
mere act of adding a symbol file can have the effect of making more
sections (typically .debug_frame) available to the unwinding machinery,
so that it can have more unwind strategies to choose from.
Up until now, we've had a bug, which went largely unnoticed, where
unwind info in the manually added symbols files (target symbols add) was
being ignored during unwinding. Reinitializing the UnwindTable fixes
that bug too.
Reviewers: clayborg, jasonmolenda, alexshap
Subscribers: jdoerfert, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58347
llvm-svn: 356361
This continues the work of introducing Error and Expected into
the DWARF parsing interfaces, this time for the DWARFCompileUnit
and DWARFDebugAranges classes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59381
llvm-svn: 356278
The package name is LibEdit, so we should use that name in the call to
find_package_handle_standard_args. Failing to do so results in the
standard_args (such as the one telling us whether REQUIRED was used in
the find_package invocation) not being handled.
llvm-svn: 356263
Summary:
As discussed in the review of D59217, this member is unnecessary since
always the first thing we do is convert it to a CompilerType.
This opens up possibilities for further cleanups (e.g. the whole
TypePair class now loses purpose, since we can just pass around
CompilerType everywhere), but I did not want to do that yet, because I
am not sure if this will not introduce breakages in some of the
platforms/configurations that I am not testing on.
Reviewers: clayborg, zturner, jingham
Subscribers: jdoerfert, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59297
llvm-svn: 356262
SBError::GetCString() returns a pointer to a string owned by the SBError
object. The code here was calling GetCString on a temporary and using
the returned pointer after the temporary was destroyed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59400
llvm-svn: 356227
The goal here is to improve our error handling and error recovery while
parsing DWARF, while at the same time getting us closer to being able to
merge LLDB's DWARF parser with LLVM's. To this end, I've udpated several
of the low-level parsing functions in LLDB to return llvm::Error and
llvm::Expected.
For now, this only updates LLDB parsing functions and not LLVM. In some
ways, this actually gets us *farther* from parity with the two
interfaces, because prior to this patch, at least the parsing interfaces
were the same (i.e. they all just returned bools, and now with this
patch they're diverging). But, I chose to do this for two primary
reasons.
LLDB has error logging code engrained deep within some of its parsing
functions. We don't want to lose this logging information, but obviously
LLVM has no logging mechanism at all. So if we're to merge the
interfaces, we have to find a way to still allow LLDB to properly report
parsing errors while not having the reporting code be inside of LLVM.
LLDB (and indeed, LLVM) overload the meaning of the false return value
from all of these extraction functions to mean both "We reached the null
entry at the end of a list of items, therefore everything was
successful" as well as "something bad and unrecoverable happened during
parsing". So you would have a lot code that would do something like:
while (foo.extract(...)) {
...
}
But when the loop stops, why did it stop? Did it stop because it
finished parsing, or because there was an error? Because of this, in
some cases we don't always know whether it is ok to proceed, or how to
proceed, but we were doing it anyway.
In this patch, I solve the second problem by introducing an
enumeration called DWARFEnumState which has two values MoreItems and
Complete. Both of these indicate success, but the latter indicates
that we reached the null entry. Then, I return this value instead of
bool, and convey parsing failure separately.
To solve the first problem (and convey parsing failure) these
functions now return either llvm::Error or llvm::Expected<DWARFEnumState>.
Having this extra bit of information allows us to properly convey all 3 of
"error, bail out", "success, call this function again", and "success,
don't call this function again".
In subsequent patches I plan to extend this pattern to the rest of the
parsing interfaces, which will ultimately get all of the log statements
and error reporting out of the low level parsing code and into the high
level parsing code (e.g. SymbolFileDWARF, DWARFASTParserClang, etc).
Eventually, these same changes will have to be backported to LLVM's
DWARF parser, but diverging in the short term is the easiest way to
converge in the long term.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59370
llvm-svn: 356190
Summary:
Makes the code a bit safer in the unlikely situation that we don't get a ClangUserExpression
when doing code completion.
Reviewers: aprantl, jingham
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: labath, jdoerfert, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59359
llvm-svn: 356174
This fixes a data race uncovered by tsan during destruction of the
GDBRemoteReplay server. The solution is to lock the thread state mutex
when receiving packets.
llvm-svn: 356168
If an invalid program is specified, lldb-vscode will send back a
response with "success" = false, but then will continue executing the
rest of request_launch(), try to launch the program anyway and try to
send another response (possibly using the `response` object after it was
moved).
This change adds a return statement so we stop executing the handler
after producing the first failing response.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59340
llvm-svn: 356110
DynamicLoaderDarwinKernel::KextImageInfo::LoadImageUsingMemoryModule a
bit so that we only read the binaries out of memory once we've
determined that we can find a real binary on the local system.
Previously, lldb would read all of the kext binaries out of memory
and then determine if it had the local copy. The kext table gives
us most the information we need (address, name, uuid) so lldb only
needs the actual in-memory load commands when it comes time to set
the section load addresses. Delay reading until that point for all
the kexts.
NFC; doing the operations in a different order.
<rdar://problem/41181173>
llvm-svn: 356108
Python 3 default encoding is utf-8, so taking random bytes and
interpreting them as a string might result in invalid unicode sequences.
As the only thing we care about here is that the formatter shows the
elements of the underyling array, relax the string matching (this is
good enough as all the elements are distinct so they resolve to different
strings).
llvm-svn: 356096
Summary:
In my next step at cleaning up modify-python-lldb.py, I started focusing
on equality comparison. To my surprise, I found out that both python and
c++ versions of the SBType class implement equality comparison, but each
one does it differently. While the python version was implemented in
terms of type name equality, the C++ one used a deep comparison on the
underlying objects.
Removing the python version caused one test to fail (TestTypeList). This
happened because the c++ version of operator== boiled down to
TypePair::operator==, which contains two items: the compiler_type and
type_sp. In this case, the compiler_type was identical, but one of the
objects had the type_sp field unset.
I tried fixing the code so that both objects keep their type_sp member,
but it wasn't easy, because there are so many operations which just work
with the CompilerType types, and so any operation on the SBType (the
test in question was doing GetPointeeType on the type of one variable
and expecting it to match the type of another variable), cause that
second member to be lost.
So instead, here I relax the equality comparison on the TypePair
class. Now, this class ignores the type_sp for the purposes of
comparison, and uses the CompilerType only. This seems reasonable, as
each TypeSP is able to convert itself to a CompilerType.
Reviewers: clayborg, aprantl, serge-sans-paille
Subscribers: jdoerfert, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59217
llvm-svn: 356048
Given this was under trace, it can just be removed. If somebody
ever needs to debug this testcase again and print the data, they
can add a new statement.
llvm-svn: 355999
This patch adds an XCOFF triple object format type into LLVM.
This XCOFF triple object file type will be used later by object file and assembly generation for the AIX platform.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58930
llvm-svn: 355989
LLVM doesn't produce DWARF64, and neither does GCC. LLDB's support
for DWARF64 is only partial, and if enabled appears to also not work.
Finally, it's untested. Removing this makes merging LLVM and
LLDB's DWARF parsing implementations simpler.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59235
llvm-svn: 355975
This is a very thin wrapper over a std::vector<DWARFDIE> and does
not seem to provide any real value over just using a container
directly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59165
llvm-svn: 355974
This is not used outside of the private implementation of the class,
so hiding in the implementation file is a nice way of simplifying
the external interface.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59164
llvm-svn: 355973
darwin kernel debug session.
Originally, the kext name & uuid were emitted in the middle of the
kext-loading period's. Last week I decided to try not printing
any details about kexts that failed to load, only printing a summary
of how many failed to load.
This time I'm print different progress characters depending on whether
the kext loaded or not ("-" for not), then at the end I will print a
summary of how many kexts failed to load and a sorted list of the
kexts with the bundle ID and the uuid. It's a lot more readable.
<rdar://problem/48654569>
llvm-svn: 355958
There's a single report of a crash coming from this current_sp being NULL. I don't
have a repro case, and I couldn't get it to happen by hand-corrupting a list. We
always get an error instead. So I don't have a test case. But checking for null
is clearly right here.
<rdar://problem/48503320>
llvm-svn: 355957
ICF can cause multiple symbols to start at the same virtual address.
I plan to handle this shortly, but I wanted to correct the comment for
now.
Deleted an obsolete comment about adjusting the offset for the magic
number at the beginning of the debug info stream. This adjustment is
handled at a lower level now.
llvm-svn: 355943
Yesterday I noticed a reproducer test failing after making a local
change. Removing the reproducer directory solved the issue. Add a test
case that detects this.
llvm-svn: 355941
The command interpreter holds a pointer to a DataRecorder. After
generating the reproducer, we deallocated all the DataRecorders, causing
the command interpreter to hold a non-null reference to an invalid
object.
This patch changes the behavior of the command provider to stop the
DataRecorders when a reproducer is generated, rather than deallocating
them.
llvm-svn: 355940
Summary:
This patch is the MVP version of importing the std module into the expression parser to improve C++ debugging.
What happens in this patch is that we inject a `@import std` into our expression source code. We also
modify our internal Clang instance for parsing this expression to work with modules and debug info
at the same time (which is the main change in terms of LOC). We implicitly build the `std` module on the first use. The
C++ include paths for building are extracted from the debug info, which means that this currently only
works if the program is compiled with `-glldb -fmodules` and uses the std module. The C include paths
are currently specified by LLDB.
I enabled the tests currently only for libc++ and Linux because I could test this locally. I'll enable the tests
for other platforms once this has landed and doesn't break any bots (and I implemented the platform-specific
C include paths for them).
With this patch we can now:
* Build a libc++ as a module and import it into the expression parser.
* Read from the module while also referencing declarations from the debug info. E.g. `std::abs(local_variable)`.
What doesn't work (yet):
* Merging debug info and C++ module declarations. E.g. `std::vector<CustomClass>` doesn't work.
* Pretty much anything that involves the ASTImporter and templated code. As the ASTImporter is used for saving the result declaration, this means that we can't
call yet any function that returns a non-trivial type.
* Use libstdc++ for this, as it requires multiple include paths and Clang only emits one include path per module. Also libstdc++ doesn't support Clang modules without patches.
Reviewers: aprantl, jingham, shafik, friss, davide, serge-sans-paille
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: labath, mgorny, abidh, jdoerfert, lldb-commits
Tags: #c_modules_in_lldb, #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58125
llvm-svn: 355939
Tablegen doesn't support options that are both flags and take values as
an argument. I noticed this when doing the tablegen rewrite, but forgot
that that affected the reproducer --capture flag.
This patch makes --capture a flag and adds --capture-path to specify a
path for the reproducer. In reality I expect this to be mostly used for
testing, but it could be useful nonetheless.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59238
llvm-svn: 355936
Summary:
This patch marks the inline namespaces from DWARF as inline and also ensures that looking
up declarations now follows the lookup rules for inline namespaces.
Reviewers: aprantl, shafik, serge-sans-paille
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: eraman, jdoerfert, lldb-commits
Tags: #c_modules_in_lldb, #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59198
llvm-svn: 355897
The RECORD macro is context sensitive because it depends on the
LLDB_GET_INSTRUMENTATION_DATA. This updates the modulemap to mark that
header as textual.
llvm-svn: 355879
Apparently the log_append variant added in r355863 is considered
ambiguous. At this point I'm out of ideas so a good old reinterpret cast
will have to do. If anybody has a better idea I'd be happy to hear it.
llvm-svn: 355866
Changing the type in the DUMMY macro to void* doesn't actually fix the
build error, because the argument type is deducted from the template (as
opposed to when serializing through the instrumentation framework, where
this would matter). Instead I've added a proper instance of log_append
that takes function pointers and logs their address.
llvm-svn: 355863
There was a crash that would happen if an IDE would ask for a child of a shared pointer via any SB API call that ends up calling StackFrame::GetValueForVariableExpressionPath(). The previous code expects an error to be set describing why the synthetic child of a type was not able to be found, but we have some synthetic child providers that weren't setting the error and returning an empty value object shared pointer. This fixes that to ensure we don't lose our debug session by crashing, fully tests GetValueForVariableExpressionPath functionality, and ensures we don't crash on GetValueForVariableExpressionPath() in the future.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59200
llvm-svn: 355850
Callbacks in the LLDB_RECORD_DUMMY macros were causing build failures
with the Xcode project. This patch replaces the function pointers with
void pointers so they can be logged.
llvm-svn: 355842
Summary:
Our python version of the SB API has (the python equivalent of)
operator bool, but the C++ version doesn't.
This is because our python operators are added by modify-python-lldb.py,
which performs postprocessing on the swig-generated interface files.
In this patch, I add the "operator bool" to all SB classes which have an
IsValid method (which is the same logic used by modify-python-lldb.py).
This way, we make the two interfaces more constent, and it allows us to
rely on swig's automatic syntesis of python __nonzero__ methods instead
of doing manual fixups.
Reviewers: zturner, jingham, clayborg, jfb, serge-sans-paille
Subscribers: jdoerfert, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58792
llvm-svn: 355824
the input StringRef is not guaranteed to be null-terminated, so using
data to get the c string is wrong. Luckily, in two of the usages the
target function already accepts a StringRef so we can just drop the
data() call, and the third one is easily replaced by a stringref-aware
function.
Issue found by msan.
llvm-svn: 355817